sfav8r
Senior Member
- Location
- San Francisco Bay Area
Jsut curious what others do in this situation.
I was at a call today for a simple troubleshoot/repair call. While I was there, I noticed that the house was apparently wired by someone other than an electrician (God I hope it wasn't an electrician). Even though the 2,000 foot addition was done in 1989 with permits, all of the kitchen outlets, the microwave, dishwasher, and one living room outlet are on one circuit. As if this wasn't bad enough, it is a 15amp circuit. The icing on the cakes is that someone solved the problem by putting it on a 30 amp breaker. I advised the customer that this was dangerous, and wrote the same thing on the invoice for the unrelated repair.
My question is this. What do you do in this situation? I don't want to leave them thinking the breaker has to be changed immediately or the hosuse will burn down, however I feel very stronly that the breaker should have been changed on the spot. The owner did seem concerned, but basically said he wanted to think it over. He knew that if I installed the 15amp breaker, it would constantly trip. They are planning a remodel of the kitchen "soon", and may wait till then. Any thoughts on the best way to handle this?
Thanks.
By the way, I didn't have my camera with me, but I was quite impressed with the use of red wire for the neutral on the range circuit, and the fact that they kept the sheathing on the Romex all the way to the breaker. How did they handle the neutrals you ask? They slit the sheathing and pulled just the neutral out as needed and did the same with the ground. Also, every ground wire was wrapped with green tape! It looks like someon TRIED to do a good job, but didn't have the knowledge and didn't grasp the concept.
I was at a call today for a simple troubleshoot/repair call. While I was there, I noticed that the house was apparently wired by someone other than an electrician (God I hope it wasn't an electrician). Even though the 2,000 foot addition was done in 1989 with permits, all of the kitchen outlets, the microwave, dishwasher, and one living room outlet are on one circuit. As if this wasn't bad enough, it is a 15amp circuit. The icing on the cakes is that someone solved the problem by putting it on a 30 amp breaker. I advised the customer that this was dangerous, and wrote the same thing on the invoice for the unrelated repair.
My question is this. What do you do in this situation? I don't want to leave them thinking the breaker has to be changed immediately or the hosuse will burn down, however I feel very stronly that the breaker should have been changed on the spot. The owner did seem concerned, but basically said he wanted to think it over. He knew that if I installed the 15amp breaker, it would constantly trip. They are planning a remodel of the kitchen "soon", and may wait till then. Any thoughts on the best way to handle this?
Thanks.
By the way, I didn't have my camera with me, but I was quite impressed with the use of red wire for the neutral on the range circuit, and the fact that they kept the sheathing on the Romex all the way to the breaker. How did they handle the neutrals you ask? They slit the sheathing and pulled just the neutral out as needed and did the same with the ground. Also, every ground wire was wrapped with green tape! It looks like someon TRIED to do a good job, but didn't have the knowledge and didn't grasp the concept.